prevail
verb /prɪˈveɪl/
/prɪˈveɪl/
(formal)动词形式
Phrasal Verbspresent simple I / you / we / they prevail | /prɪˈveɪl/ /prɪˈveɪl/ |
he / she / it prevails | /prɪˈveɪlz/ /prɪˈveɪlz/ |
past simple prevailed | /prɪˈveɪld/ /prɪˈveɪld/ |
past participle prevailed | /prɪˈveɪld/ /prɪˈveɪld/ |
-ing form prevailing | /prɪˈveɪlɪŋ/ /prɪˈveɪlɪŋ/ |
普遍存在;盛行;流行 - prevail in something We were horrified at the conditions prevailing in local prisons.
地方监狱的普遍状况让我们震惊。 - prevail among somebody Those beliefs still prevail among certain social groups.
那些信念在某些社会群体中仍很盛行。
Collocations Dictionaryadverb- always
- usually
- eventually
- …
- be likely to
- must
- should
- …
- against
- over
- prevail in something We were horrified at the conditions prevailing in local prisons.
) to be accepted, especially after a struggle or an argument思想、观点等 synonym triumph被接受;战胜;压倒 - Justice will prevail over tyranny.
正义必将战胜暴虐。 - Fortunately, common sense prevailed.
幸而理智占了上风。
Topics Successc1- Her happy outlook always prevailed.
她乐观的态度总是占上风。 - His view eventually prevailed over theirs.
他的观点最终战胜了他们的观点。 - The wishes of 20 million people ought to prevail against those of 200 thousand.
2,000 万民众的意愿应该会压倒 20 万人的意愿。 - The Act requires the will of the Commons ultimately to prevail over that of the upper house.
该法案要求下议院的意志最终压倒上议院的意志。
Collocations Dictionaryadverb- always
- usually
- eventually
- …
- be likely to
- must
- should
- …
- against
- over
- Justice will prevail over tyranny.
- [intransitive] prevail (against/over somebody) to defeat an opponent, especially after a long struggle
(尤指长时间斗争后)战胜,挫败 - In a one-sided final, Spain prevailed against title-holder Croatia 40–34.
在一场实力悬殊的决赛中,西班牙队以40:34挫败了卫冕的克罗地亚队。 - They wasted two penalties but still prevailed 2–1.
他们浪费了两个点球,但仍然以2比1获胜。
- In a one-sided final, Spain prevailed against title-holder Croatia 40–34.
词源late Middle English: from Latin praevalere ‘have greater power’, from prae ‘before’ + valere ‘have power’.